San Francisco Chronicle

July is worst month of year for auto sales

- By Dee-Ann Durbin Dee-Ann Durbin is an Associated Press writer.

July saw the biggest decline in U.S. vehicle sales this year, leaving automakers to hope that people are just waiting to pounce on Labor Day deals.

Sales of new cars and trucks fell 7 percent to 1.4 million in July, according to Autodata Corp. It was the seventh straight month of lower sales.

July is often a slower month as buyers vacation and wait for clearance events in August and September. This year, big cuts in sales to rental car fleets and commercial customers were also a factor. Hyundai, for example, cut its fleet sales by 77 percent in July.

General Motors said its sales fell 15 percent in July, while Hyundai’s dropped 28 percent. Ford’s sales were down 7.5 percent, Fiat Chrysler’s declined 10 percent, Volkswagen’s fell 5.8 percent, Nissan’s fell 3 percent and Honda’s were down 1.2 percent.

Two major automakers bucked the trend. Toyota’s sales rose 3.6 percent while Subaru’s were up 7 percent.

Analysts have been predicting lower sales this year as demand levels out after an unpreceden­ted seven straight years of growth. New vehicle sales hit a record 17.55 million last year.

July’s pace would put annual sales at 16.7 million. That was lower than expected, said Alec Gutierrez, a senior market analyst with the Kelley Blue Book site, but he is maintainin­g his full-year forecast of 17.1 million sales.

Mark LaNeve, Ford Motor Co.’s U.S. sales chief, said automakers have been preparing for lower sales this year. He doesn’t see July as an accelerati­on of the downward trend. He said GM’s decision to cut sales to lowprofit rental car fleets by 81 percent — or 11,200 vehicles — was a big factor. Ford also cut fleet sales by 26 percent, and had to stop sales of its Transit commercial van for a few weeks for a recall.

“We’re still operating at a very high level,” LaNeve said.

Automakers continue to see healthy profits, thanks to consumers’ preference for SUVs. Car shopping site Edmunds said the average price paid for a new vehicle in July was $34,558, 2 percent higher than the same month a year ago. GM said sales of its recently updated GMC Acadia SUV jumped 30 percent, while sales of Toyota’s RAV4 SUV rose 36 percent to 41,804, a monthly record.

But car sales are plummeting, hurt by low gas prices and changing tastes. Sales of the Ford Fusion midsize sedan dropped 42 percent, while sales of the Chevrolet Spark subcompact fell a whopping 82 percent.

Automakers began offering in July, and will continue to do so for the rest of the summer as they make way for 2018 models. Average interest rates on newvehicle loans fell to a six-month low of 4.77 percent in July as more brands offered no-interest financing, Edmunds said. Toyota was offering it for 72 months on a 2017 Camry as the 2018 models arrived in dealership­s.

Gutierrez said buyers can expect incentives to rise by about $200 in August and September.

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